Kevin Vose

Kevin Vose's first book, Resurrecting Candrakirti, was published
in 2009 by Wisdom Publications. The Indian Buddhist Candrakirti is renowned
throughout the Tibetan world as the foremost interpreter of emptiness,
considered by Tibetans to be the final nature of reality. His writings form the
basis of "Middle Way" (Madhyamaka)
study in Tibetan monasteries into the present day. According to Tibetan scholars,
Candrakirti's emptiness denies the existence of any final "essence" (svabhava), making it both the highest
philosophical view and the essential that must be realized in order to reach
nirvana.

However, Candrakirti's
acclaim was unknown in his own lifetime and for centuries following his death.
How, then, did he become the preeminent philosopher of Tibet? This book
examines Candrakirti's resurrection, showing that after centuries of neglect
eleventh-century Buddhists on both sides of the Himalayas began to explore his
unique understanding of emptiness. Unlike his near-universal regard in later
periods, Candrakirti's introduction to Tibet sparked intense debate on some of
the essential issues of Buddhism, ranging from the role of rationality in
religious pursuits to the nature of transformation and enlightenment. These
disputes saw Tibetan Madhyamaka split into two intellectual camps each with
their own institutional, social, and political supports.

Resurrecting Candrakirti explores the views of Candrakirti's early champions
and detractors, authors foundational to Tibetan Buddhist philosophy but whose
works remain largely unknown. As such, it provides a much-needed examination of
how some of the central edifices of Tibetan philosophy formed.

The book is part of Wisdom
Publications' "Studies in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism" series. The series
publishes "outstanding new
contributions to scholarship on Indian and Tibetan Buddhism" in the hopes of
bringing to light "these traditions' unique heritage and the significance of
their contribution to the world's religious and philosophical achievements."